COCKNEY GEEZERS

Fascinating photos show life before gastro pubs in 70s East London with buzzing factories and bombed-out houses

UNEARTHED photos reveal working-class life in East London in the 70s - before gastropubs, cafes and hipster kids transformed Hackney forever.

In the decades after the war, the area was a raw landscape of bombed out houses, kids playing in streets and buzzing factories teeming with skilled workers.

Advertisement
Giorgi’s Cafe on Bethnal Green Road, 1971. Some of the areas cafes, such as E Pelicci's, have remained in the area since 1900Credit: Neil Martinson / Hoxton Mini Press
Dalston Kingsland's vibrant Ridley Road Market in 1981. These days, world food stalls and veg sellers rub shoulders with trendy bars and clubsCredit: Neil Martinson / Hoxton Mini Press
Politics in Hackney started to change in the 70s and 80s; Nurses took to the streets in pay disputes outside Bethnal Green HospitalCredit: Neil Martinson / Hoxton Mini Press

It was a far cry from gentrified, advanced areas such as Shoreditch, Hackney, Whitechapel and Dalston - now more famed for cutting-edge technology, industry and trendy pubs and clubs.

The images, taken by local Hackney boy Neil Martinson, take the viewer through workshops, street markets and council homes to capture a time that has nearly been lost forever.

Neil worked as a freelance photographer and taught photography and presents the stunning photos in his latest collection, 'Hackney Archive: Work and Life 1971-1985'.

His work has taken him around the world - from the Soviet Union to modern day Berlin and Brighton to New York - documenting the gradual changes to the world's most striking locations.

Advertisement

Vivian Usherwood introduces the new book, saying: "Why is Hackney called ‘Hackney’? Why could it not be ‘Dirty’?

"Its name stinks of steam and smoke. How much longer do I have to live in this place? Everybody wants to leave and try to forget about Hackney.

"But I can’t. It’s groaning inside me. And that is why everybody smokes. To forget about it. Everybody wants to leave and go to the country."

A factory worker smokes as he works in a garment factory in Dalston's Shacklewell Lane, 1981Credit: Neil Martinson / Hoxton Mini Press
Advertisement
East London's main waterway, the River Lea, in 1971. The river originates in originates in the Chiltern Hills, England, and flows southeast through east London where it meets the River ThamesCredit: Neil Martinson / Hoxton Mini Press
It was common to see children playing on the streets in the 1970s. The lack of traffic, and very different attitudes, gave children a freedom that seems quite remote nowCredit: Neil Martinson / Hoxton Mini Press
Fresh fish of the day on sale in Dalston's Ridley Road Market in 1981Credit: Neil Martinson / Hoxton Mini Press
A local rag and bone man rides his horse and cart on Graham Road, Hackney, in 1971Credit: Neil Martinson / Hoxton Mini Press
Advertisement
Local woman Rachel Point and her family at their home on the Nightingale Estate in Lower Clapton, 1974Credit: Neil Martinson / Hoxton Mini Press
The Telsner family at home in the predominantly Jewish community of Stamford Hill in 1981. Hackney and surrounding areas has played home to multiple nationalities and cultures throughout the decadesCredit: Neil Martinson / Hoxton Mini Press

MOST READ IN NEWS

'HEARTLESS'
BA stewardess facing sack after 'callous' online post about Liam Payne
CONOR SPEAKS
McGregor breaks silence after jury finds he DID assault woman in hotel
DEE'S TEARS
McGregor's partner leaves court in tears after jury finds he DID assault woman
TRAGIC FIND
Baby A was 'wrapped in pink fabric' when walker found tot in snow-covered field

Advertisement
machibet777.com